Samsung Announces 970 PRO and 970 EVO NVMe SSDs (anandtech.com) 51
hyperclocker shares a report from AnandTech: Samsung has announced the third generation of their high-end consumer NVMe SSDs. The new 970 PRO and 970 EVO M.2 NVMe SSDs use a newer controller and Samsung's latest 64-layer 3D NAND flash memory. The outgoing 960 PRO and 960 EVO were first announced in September 2016 and shipped that fall, so they have had a fairly long run as Samsung's flagship consumer SSDs. Compared to its predecessor, the 970 EVO promises a small improvement in sequential read speed, and a more substantial boost to sequential write speed for all but the smallest 250GB model. Peak random access performance is also substantially improved, but again the 250GB model gets left out, and is actually rated as slower than the 960 EVO 250GB. The warranty on the EVO has been extended from three years to five years, and the write endurance ratings have been increased by 50% to retain almost the same drive writes per day rating.
The 970 PRO's performance specs aren't too different from the 970 EVO. Many of the ratings are the same, and the ones that differ are mostly better by just 3-11% for the PRO. There are just two major exceptions to this. First, the PRO doesn't rely on SLC write caching so it can maintain its write speed far longer than the EVO. Second, the rated write endurance of the 970 PRO is twice that of the EVO, going from just over 0.3 Drive Writes Per Day to 0.6 DWPD. Neither of these are an important factor for ordinary consumer use cases, but they help the 970 PRO retain some shine as a premium product.
The 970 PRO's performance specs aren't too different from the 970 EVO. Many of the ratings are the same, and the ones that differ are mostly better by just 3-11% for the PRO. There are just two major exceptions to this. First, the PRO doesn't rely on SLC write caching so it can maintain its write speed far longer than the EVO. Second, the rated write endurance of the 970 PRO is twice that of the EVO, going from just over 0.3 Drive Writes Per Day to 0.6 DWPD. Neither of these are an important factor for ordinary consumer use cases, but they help the 970 PRO retain some shine as a premium product.
Re: (Score:2)
From the prices in the article, they're the same price or lower than the 960 evo.
Of course, it's more expensive than spinning rust, but the throughput is pretty insane.
Re: (Score:2)
I built a new system a few months ago with a 960 EVO for the system drive. I came not from a SATA drive, but from a 320 GB PATA drive. I have no idea how it's survived this long.
Anyway, a full reboot of Win7 until the desktop is available again takes 40-45 seconds now from hitting the Reboot button. I used to go make coffee while waiting.
SSD is not about storage. It's about access time.
Re: (Score:2)
I have a M.2 SATA drive and a 512GB 950 Evo and it takes me only about fifteen seconds. And I have some extra crap in my boot.
Re: (Score:2)
Less than half a second from power-up to interface: Tandy Color Computer 3.
Re: (Score:1)
You can thank me for this. (Score:2)
Just ordered a new 960 last Friday so of course a faster one is coming.
Re: (Score:1)
LOL. My boss finally decided to let us buy SSDs so we bought three dozen Samsung 860 500GB drives just two weeks ago that I have to start installing the end of this week. Our CTO argued against SSDs since he said viruses would spread faster if we had faster drives, but he finally got overruled.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I'd say that to troll staff....
Re: (Score:2)
860 is a recent release, no?
And in any case, the viruses will spread 2-3 times as fast on the NVME drives? All your important files will be encrypted in seconds!
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah at those prices it doesn't take long before even doing a RAID 0 of SSDs with SSD backup drives become cheaper.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Just ordered a new 960 last Friday so of course a faster one is coming.
Does anybody even care about SSD speed any more?
In real terms these incremental improvements are just meaningless numbers now. Manufacturers should focus on reliability/durability instead.
Re: (Score:3)
Well, for SATA, you can't have faster SSDs. We've hit the max for SATA3 for at least a few years now (540MB/s). So the 800 series SSDs from Samsung are basically incremental improvements as they've hit max speed years ago.
And I'm pretty sure the durability issue has been a non-issue, especially with Samsung SSDs - a test
Re: (Score:2)
forgot to mention the most important thing... (Score:5, Informative)
...the price!
EVO:
$119.99 (48Â/GB) 250 GB
$229.99 (46Â/GB) 512 GB
$449.99 (45Â/GB) 1TB
$849.99 (42Â/GB 2TB
PRO:
$329.99 (64Â/GB) 512GB
$629.99 (62Â/GB) 1TB
Something is missing here. (Score:5, Funny)
I think unicode support would have made your post better but that's just my 2Â. ;)
Re: (Score:2)
Samsung claim this supports OPAL v2 / eDrive encryption, but when I checked their last generation M.2 drives it was actually promised in a coming firmware update. I wonder if they have it actually working on release for these ones, because you can't really enable it later without wiping the drive.
Neat but... slash those prices. (Score:3, Interesting)
Cheapest HDD I can buy here in Norway at the moment: 4TB for 799 NOK = ~$20/TB before VAT, cheapest SSD is 1911 NOK for 960 GB = ~$200/TB before VAT so still 10x and it's been that way for a while. The Samsung EVO 960 price was almost flat for its entire lifetime, same if I look at the Crucial MX300 which has also been around a good while. Sure better warranty, endurance, performance and consistency is nice but the data still has to fit. I miss the old days when computers got twice as good for half the price every 18 months or whatever the latest bastardization of Moore's law was. RAM prices have tripled from the bottom in 2016. GPUs have gone nuts on the crypto craze. You actually got a better computer for the same money a few years ago than you do today, except maybe the CPU where Ryzen has made some ways.
Re: (Score:2)
Game consoles use flash memory.
Smartphones use flash memory.
Tablets use flash memory.
Set-top boxes use flash memory.
IoT gadgets use flash memory.
The demand for flash memory keeps increasing and companies don't want to build new flash memory factories in case demands slows down. Prices go up.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes but can you get it in your pocket. You have to remember the fundamental reason for these increases is demand from new gadgets.
Computers didn't stop getting "better", the definition of "better" just changed from faster / more capacity per price, to smaller formfactor per price.
Though with interest in phones and tablets starting to become lackluster and hopefully peaking maybe we can see a change in the trend.
Also I just upgraded my 5 year old SSD. Sure it was the same price per TB but I also got an order
Re: (Score:2)
Looks like HDDs will be best for price per byte for the foresable future
Re: (Score:2)
Snakeoil (Score:1)
Re: Snakeoil (Score:1)
I noticed the prices dropping back in late Feb. (Score:2)
I noticed late February that prices on a couple different brands of NVMe SSDs had dropped around the same time, and have stayed a little lower since.
Prices are finally starting to move. I'll snag one of those 960s or Samsung 961s if they go a little lower. My SATA SSD is tolerable at current prices.